Display Signed Copies Only Display All Inventory on Abebooks

Available Copies from Independent Booksellers

Huxley, Aldous. Along the Road: Notes and Essays of a Tourist. George H. Doran, New York, 1925.

Price: US$10.00 + shipping

Condition: Good

Description: Brown cloth, paper label. Covers lightly worn, label rubbed, head of spine slightly frayed.

Seller: Possum Books, Charlottesville, VA, U.S.A.

Huxley, Aldous. Along the Road, Notes and Essays of a Tourist. George H. Doran Co., New York, 1925.

Price: US$25.00 + shipping

Condition: Good

Description: This book has been bound in a brownish/red cloth with a white title label on the spine. There is very little corner bumping or edge wear. Owner's name inked, then blackened of fep. Binding tight, clean. Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall

Seller: Lowry's Books, Three Rivers, MI, U.S.A.

Aldous Huxley (1894-1963). Along the Road. Notes and Essays of a Tourist. George H. Doran Company, New York, 1925.

Price: US$26.30 + shipping

Condition: Very Good

Description: Octavo. 266 pages. Interesting essays on various aspects of tourism.

Seller: Guy de Grosbois, Montréal, QC, Canada

Huxley, Aldous. Along The Road (Notes and Essays of a Tourist). George H. Doran, New York, 1925.

Price: US$400.00 + shipping

Description: Very Good in the publisher's brown paper-covered boards half-bound in ivory vellum. Burgundy leather spine-label, gilt-stamped. Top-edge gilt. 266pps. Neither the rare dustjacket nor the slipcase are present. There is modest sunning and wear in the area of the spine. The boards have light touches of soiling. Internally, there is some browning to the endpapers and a previous owner's unassuming namestamp is near the top of the ffep and, again, on the rear pastedown; there is a spot of browning, also, on pgs 178-179 from where a newspaper clipping had been laid in. The binding is slightly brittle, though sound, with all pages intact. Other than the aforementioned minor flaw to page 178, the text is in excellent, clean condition. One of 250 copies SIGNED by Huxley on a limitation page. ".Some people travel on business, some in search of health. But it is neither the sickly, nor the men of affairs who fill the Grand Hotels and the pockets of their proprietors. It is those who travel 'for pleasure,' as the phrase goes. What Epicurus, who never travelled except when he was banished, sought in his own garden, our tourists seek abroad. And do they find their happiness? Those who freqeuent the places where they resort must often find this question, with a tentative answer in the negative, fairly forced upon them. For tourists are, in the main, a very gloomy-looking tribe. I have seen much brighter faces at a funeral than in the Piazza of St. Mark's. Only when they can band together and pretend, for a brief, precarious hour, that they are at home, do the majority of tourists look really happy. One wonders why they come abroad. The face is that very few travellers really like travelling. If they go to the trouble and expense of travelling, it is not so much from curiosity, for fun or because they like to see things beautiful and strange, as out of a kind of snobbery. People travel for the same reason as they collect works of art: because the best people do it. To have been to certain spots on the earth's surface is socially correct; and having been there, one is superior to those who have not." -- from the (quite witty and splendid) opening. Purchase with confidence: all books, gradings, and descriptions are rendered the care of a genuine bibliophile. Satisfaction guaranteed or all costs you've incurred will be promptly refunded. Thanks for your interest in Nooks Of Books. To assist with your decision, photos can be emailed upon request.

Seller: Nooks Of Books , Elkins Park, PA, U.S.A.